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MSS HORA ~ BEHIND SCENE ~ ALTHE RUS She Talks to Performers in Mhelr Own German, Italian or Spanish. —S MUCH IMPRESSED. It , | : i F i i ure? ! i | iH Hi 1 ej if " 7B i g : H g F K l ag ii ye i o i g HI § f H i F x : i é E } j i K E if fas Fe + | if i i H B SEE i | § | i : i i ; ‘with the show. “But you must 1 ‘was there; Victoria Codona, from Spain, @ailed “the prettiest girl in the crous,” ‘who makes male hearts palpttate when ghe walks the high wire, was intro Guced with Fred Bradna and his wife Bila, noted riers from Germany; Mra, Dekvoe, the daring acrobat of England, and Mise Jardo, the Italian <ymnast, who makes heads spin in harmony with ber air apinning feata M188 MORGAN TALKED TO EACH WW HER OWN LANQUAGE. Gites Morgan talked with them aft, fie talked with them as woman to woman. She wanted to know about their Dives and their customs. She showed them she was also something of an ecrobat-e linguistic acrobat—for ehe spoke to each in her own language. She Fattled off German to the delight of rau Bradna. She reminded Miss Jacdo et her own sunny skies when ehe switched to the Italian, She made ‘the prettiest girl” beam when she addressed her in the musical language of Spain. She won them all and they all just bab- dled away to her as if they had known her all their lives. It's certain Mise Morgan never mado a soctal hit quite as strong and lasting as the one she made in the circus greenroom. ‘The distinguished daughter of a ats- ¢inguished father was much ‘mpressed with Eugene, sixteen-year-old son of Perfect in figure and supple as rubber, he proved as modest as a young girl. Miss Morgan asked the mother all about him, Vhen dk you begin to train for this wt she asked. “In the cradle,” Mrs, Dekoe replied. “I brought him up from the start on fruits and vegetables and lots of milk. He does not know the taste of meat. Me comes from five generations of cir- cus people. His great grandfather was @ special pet of King Edward VII, then the Prince of Wales. My ambition was to make him the very best acrobat the world hi er yn and I think I am aucceedin: Milas Morgan asked if she couldn't Oring several of hor rich Iittle friends to ae Eugene and the mother proudly ecquiesced, The strongest woman, Frau Sand- wine, who juggles welghts like Papa Morgan juggles millions, was asked for @ fow oxhthitions. “Certainly,” replied Frau Sandwina, and ectzing two of the men performers ‘by the seats of their trousers, she tossed them into the air av if she were filcking Gust from her skirt. Then she handled @ few tons of t while Miss Morgan applauded enthu: ity, ‘Miss Morgan went away pleased and impressed with her visit, She was sur- moral tone of the cireus much theatre, she raid, attributing !t to the ection thrown about the girl per- ere by their mothers or brothers. Next Monday @ box party o! clety whom she will present to little BDugene Dekoe. To-morrow night Miss Morgan will entertain 600 working girls at Terrace Back in America With London Symphony After Twenty Years, Hungarian Musical Genius Regrete That He Ever Left Us. New York Audiences Ap- preciate Music as When He Knew Them Before, and They Have Improved in Two Dec- ade By Nixola Greeley-Smith. i : : that the highly dramatic effects of or- chestra leaders were mainly for the benefit of the auiience, but all alone with his orohestra in Carnegie Hall Ar- thur Nikisch was quite the most tem- Deramental human being I have ever ito head—all with = singularly long and slender baton that through the air like a Geath dealing rapier in the riot tuslé, but lured the love motif as © Wently as if it were @ spray of apple blossoms fiuttered by the | south wing, Nikiech, like Toscanini, conducts with- out a score, a feat of memory to whioh few musicians are equal. ONE WOULD THINK AN WAS COMING. At a rehearsal he frequently halts the orchestra with an impatient tap of the Daton on the empty rack before him and sings a bar or so of the music to show how it should be played. Yester- day when he uttered the ferocious ex- ARMY clamation, “Give me blood! I want blood and fire!” he accompanied the re- Quest with a furious stamping of feet Which suggested that an army with banners was approaching, . Finally, after the orchestra had tried | and tried and tried, he got just the right crashing conclusion and said eurtly, ‘Thank you, gentlemen,” and the re- hearsal was ove “I should never have left America, I regret that I left tt," said Mr, Niktech to me afterward. “I find here the same appreciation of music, the same enthu- | siaem that prevailed twenty years ago. I cannot say that your audiences have improved any more than all audiences all over the world have improved. ctate # great when & musical audionce bas heard it twenty times, say at one concert ® year, then only is it understood aud appreciated. “Ig it not rig * that this should be? A great genius puts ail his soul and heart in his music, Is it likely an audl- ence could receive and understand the soul and heart of genius at one con- cert? No, it takes twenty years—your audiences have improved if they are twenty years older and have been hear- ing sood muaic all the time, SIGN OF GREAT IMPROVEMENT IN MUSICAL TASTE. “Atter I left America, when I first {conducted at the Gewandhauy, in Lelp- |sic, the subscribers gave away their Uckets when there was 4 Brahms sym- phony on the programme. To-day they crowd the houses when Brahins te played. There has been the sam Garden. She arranged with the circus management for a jiu jitsu exhibition et that time. Four men and four wemen will demonstrate to the girls how, by jiu jitsu, they can protect themeslves from prowlers and thugs of the night. DRIVER SPEEDS FROM VICTIM Mra Joveph W. Tarboll, seventy years old, a wealthy widow of Wor- ceater, Mass., was run over by an ex- press wagon in front of the Martha ‘Washington Hotel, on East Twenty- ninth street, to-day and’ mortally In- jured. an4 eho received cuts and bruises and Anternal Injuries. nd drove off before uny one ‘sould make out the lettering on the ‘wagon. Mrs, Tarbell was carried Into tho hotel. Dr. 1. Willams of No. 3 Bast Thirticth street, sald there was almost no cha covery. Mra, Tarbell makes home with her ter and son-in-law, the Rt. Rev. mgm of the Park Church, of ‘ wo Her arm and nose were broken | of the wagon whipped up | provement in musical taste everywher ‘else. There {s more appreciation b cause there 1g more knowledge, more experience of the best music, “New York has given me a wonder ful reception, which makes me feel very |humble and very proud. | “Of your composers I will not speak, because I do not feel competent to do |so, But my reception here has made | me sorry that I evar left America.” | Mer, Nikisch had to be coaxed back— |coaxed with @ guarantee of $100,000 to himself and the orchestra, made by Warren R, Fales, a wealthy cotton manufacturer and music lover of Provi- dence, HI, Yet, when the temperamental | orchestra leader landed last week he fas 90 glad to be here that he kissed verybody in sight, including the phieg |matic editor of a German newspaper and his astounded millionaire backer, who exclaimed: | _ “Well, Mikisch, I'm giad to see you} but J don’t know that am as ging as oll that” The conductor's highly ingenious prese ascent says that the huge sapphire ring | eich Nikisch weere om his left hand ws wae sent to him at the end of @ oon- cert tn Germany, wrapped in a pro- gramme on which was written in a woman's handwriting: “Wear this in Memory of an unknown admirer.” Go Nikiech wears it. The press agent ways, in memory of all women, Ab, well-e-day! MRS, MILLAR HERE ='WITH TINY MONKEY CAUGHT IM FRC London Society Woman Cap- tured the Marmoset Near the White Nile. When the White Star liner Cedric reached here to-day from Naples and Alexandria, her first cabin list did not mention a very diminutive passenger whose trip had not coat a penny, al- though he enjoyed four heavy meals each day, bathed regularly and had a whole corner of the top deck to himself as a solarium, He {8 “Dan,” @ five months’ old mar moset, and he was captured near White Nile, in Africa, by Mrs, Milile Millar of London, who a brother on @ six-hundred«mile hunting expedition, Mrs, Millar will remain in New York eight days, during which time she hopos to have moupted a number of small ant- mals that were trapped or shot by her party. She will return to Liverpool on the Cedrle, “Dan” was captured by Mra, Millar near Khartum after sne had given the animal's mother enough whisky to ren- der her unconscious, She said the natives advised her this was the safost way to steal the youngster, She bagged a specimen of buck known as the “Mrs. Gray” variet 14 to be rare, A crocodile and an alligator were killed by her, and her brother has thelr aking Mrs. Millar was joined at Naples by iiss Mary Montgomery, of 8 Park avenue, who had been at the Durbar, ener CURATE STOPS A RUN ON STAMFORD BANK, Foreigners Were Alarmed as Result of the Teller’s Theft of $35,200, STAMFORD, Conn, April 11.—A threatened run on the Stamford Say- ings Bank following the disclosure of the defalcation of $36,200 by he senior teller, Major William H. Holly wi averted to-day by Kev. Antonio 0, curate in St John's Church, Father Rizzo, an Italian, went amony the Italians of the city, advised them of the absolute soundness of the bank and persuaded them to leave their money in it. Up to noon about $12,000 had been withdrawn, The bank deposits amount $5,000,000, “It has been @ d Treasurer Bogardus, “W thers omg end ABDUL BANA ABBAS THR BVENING WORLD; THURSDAY, APRIL 11, 1912. Fire! Blood! Blood! Nikisch Demands Of His Orchestra—And Gets Them IS HERE T0 PREACH BROTHERLY LOVE PERSIAN PHILOSOPHER WHO COMES TO TEACH ° THE BAHI MOVEMENT. JERSEY STRIKERS GIVE IN. Garfleld Weavers Ge te Work, Ad- mitting They Are Beaten. ‘Wh the opening hour at the Forst- mann and Huffmann worsted mill, Gar. field, N. J. to-day practically all the weavers who had gone on strike @ month @go and whose ricting had reeulted in Dloodshed last week, returned to work, admitting they had lost the strike ana|*, accepted the offer of a 6 to 1 per cent. increase in wages. The employers re fused to recognize the “shop committee.” "ARTHUR NIRISCH \ $50,000 BOND BY SHUBERT IN THE BLUE BIRD SUIT. Theatrical Man Doubles the Amount of Security Suggested by the Court. Lee Shubert dispelled the charge of his opponents in the theatrical world that he fs on the narrow edge of the financial horizon by offering to show to Supreme Court Justice Bischoff to-day that he owns upward of $2,000,000 In real estate, bonds and other securities in this city and does a business of $0,000,000 annually, Liebler & Company wanted Justice. Bischoff to appoint a receiver to take charge of the affairs af “The Blye Bird” company, claiming @ half interost in the company and alleging that Shubert was appropriating most of the profits to his own uso, “Tt is not the province of the Supreme Court,” declared Justice Bischoff, “to arsume the responsibility of theatrical Productions, I shall certainly not en- gage the court In productions of theatri- cal ventures," Samuel Untermyer, appearing with William Klein for Shubert, said his client was perfectly willing to furnish « bond for almost any amount pending the trial the Leber & Company claim. Jusi hoff suggested a bond of $25,000, but Mr. Untermyer said he would Just as soon double the amount and make the bond 90,0, David ¢ enting Liebler & himself being appointed receiver, We will furnish a bond for $0,000 within fort a Un- way with nd this ae WHAT RVZRY wom. xNows— and t t 1 vat is th tne Hook wa 6 wi ine orld is Ju aes er given Ww Newae IW one ne y Don't jo order from newsdealer in termyer, ny ne | an Evening World reporter in his atate- The Persian Philosopher and Teach- er of Bahai Movement Met by Forty Disciples. Abdul Baha Abbas, Abbas Effendi, “teacher of the Bahal movement, a Persian philosopher with a flowing robe and @ ahapeless mouth, reached New York to-day on the White Star liner Cedric, Abbas Effendi was accompanied by his nephew, Dr. Ameer Dareed, and two other philosophers, Said Assadullah and Effendi Shoghi. Abbas Effendi was met at the pier by @ party of about forty prosperous look- Ing persons, including Mountford Mills, of No, 887 West End evenue, a lawyer, and Arthur Pflabury Dodge of No, i Vest One Hundred and Thirty-ninth reet, also a lawyer. Among the wom- en in the reception committee was Mrs. W. H. Beede of No, 413 Wost One Hun- dred and Fifteenth street, who sald the arrival of the “teacher” would be not- able in the future as “one of the great- est days in all history.” “What we need here in this country," said Mountford Mills while he was wait- ing for the Cedric to be docked, “is a movement euch as the ‘teacher’ is lead- ing—a movement to bring Christianity and love to the upper orders of soctety. 'Dhe people in the steerage know about such things already." “I am here,” Abdul Baha Abbas told room, “to unify the religions of the world, to talk in the interests of unt- versal peace. I have no creed to Preach; I have no doctrines to pro- pound. My word is the word of love. Do not worship a lantern—worship the light." \ Concerning woman suffrage Abas Ef- fendi 1s as modern as Sylvia Pankhurst. HE 18 FOR WOMAN'S SUFFRAGE AMONG OTHER THINGS. “The woman suffragists,” he said, “are fighting for what must be. Their men- tal caparities are the same as those of m they have the same civil officer; they are the equal of men, Some of them, of course, need further but that is all. ‘There are ways to God us there are souls to His creatures, and the suffrage movement is but the hewing of another path to Him.” It is aid of the Bahal movement that it is not @ sect, that it 1s not a creed, that It works without organization and that !t centres altogether about the will and the person of Abdul Baha Ab- bas, who is the son of the late Mirza | All Mohammed, wnd the grandson of a wealthy Persian merchant. Abdul Baha Abbas came Into posses: sion of this wealth after the advent of the, Young Turk party. Prior to that | 1t:on garbage, permitted ‘to have the company of his wife and family. It is sald the has come to this country entirely at his 1s followers contribute but own expense. nothing to his incom they predict for his advent here a era of spiritual thought in Ame “These men and women wh to-day," said Mountford Mills, hungering for spiritual £ The prob. lems of life and all its terrifying com- plexities have puzzled and bewlldered them until th cher sent his word, When that word abroad, as it 1s they say, here bound to, we will see an end of all) de and the attainment of the king- dom of brotherly love.” Abdul Baha Abas went first to the Ansonia, but he may become the guest of Mr. Mi MAIL MEN'S CHARITY FETE, The annual entertainment and ball of the Postal Employees’ Mutual Atd Axsoclation will be held ‘Tuesday, April 16, at the Harlem Casino, Second avenue and One Hundred and Twenty- seventh street. The afternoon perform: ance will be mado unusually interesting The return to work followed whole- 6" Ave., Cor.18 St. The Most Wonderful Values Ever Prod: in this Sale of filed sult for Court Broomberger, against Dr. Otto Schirmer, surgeon, charging alienation of his wife's affections. are just) & St \ ABO. AHA ABeAS WINE CLERK SUES SURGEON FOR HIS WIFE’S AFFECTIONS. Asks $50,000 From Fashionable Doctor, Lately From Berlin, and Makes Charges. Philip Greenhoot, a wine clerk, to-day $0,00 in the Supreme through his attorneys, Spits & No. % Nassau atrect, a wealthy Dr. Schirmer ts well known a visiting surgeon at the German jospital, to which institution he came lately from Berlin. He le #aid to enjoy a large practice among fashionable ‘women. In the sult the wine clerk alleges not only allenation, but criminal conversa- tion and enticement. One specific case of misconduct Is charged, on March 25 tast, when Greenhoot says he broke Into Dr. Schirmer’s room on the ground floor covered his wife, Berth: Mra. Greenhoot began sult yesterday for ration on the ground of cruelty, charging her busband struck her on one occasion. ‘The Greenhoots were married 1898 and have two children, The Bust Way to Clean Howe, = Put two tablespoonfuls of én in a pail of water. Wash the floors and woodwork, the solution into sinks, i pipes and toilet basins, sprinkle use it wherever there is grease and dirt. q Use CN from cellar to gar- ret. It will remove every par- ticle of deposit, destroy bad odors, kill germs and make everything absolutely clean, { Don't use soap, for soap is only cleanser. Don't use care bolic acid because that is a poison, (CN is non-poisonous, | © CN does the work better and is Ask for “The with the Gable Top. Yellow Package fee, 25e, See, 81,00 to ladies and children and will com- mence at 1.90. ‘Dag evening performa will begin at $13, to be follo dancing, Tie sood for either afte: | noon or evening performance, may ve |had from any member of the committer, | The profits of this entertatan will go to the mortuary fund of the association, which haw paid claims amounting to | $51,000 from July 23, 1895, to date, at No, 133 East Sixtleth street and dis- | Hat this it is Spec WEST DISINFECTING CO., NEW YORK. At - - Empire Waist and WHAT EVEBY WOMAN XNOWS— ming. and man toy, for chat matter, bs that 6 Jo k which goes with § Just about the given with a news- W one next Sunday, Don't der from newsdealer in Manhattan Crepe de Chine, one piece _—— style. pire, beautifully embroidered, Ostrich Plume Hai This Magnificent Hat of Tagal © Hemp or Milan 3 Ostrich Plumes ‘” sold elsewhere at $25, and find ours equal in every way. This Stunning Hat in the Very. 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Suit to right is of man- serge, elaborately embroidered; al! colors; $14.98 —— i 7th At $3.75—Tub silk petticoats, Summer weight. At $4.75—Of heavy Messaline Silk, side plaiting. At $6.75—Best silk jersey top messaline flounce. We are showing a very complete line of high class staples and novelties in all colors of Chiffons, Foulards, Habutai, All Silk Jersey and Chiffon Taf- jetas. James McCutcheon & Co, =~ Sth Ave. & 34th St. waldotratorte People who have cultivated knowl- edge of tea always drink Gale dosertions since the ‘William D, Haywood, the ‘W. organiser, for Lawrences, - TELLS OF MASKED BANOM ms ae liars. He cou! factory description of the robbers, black and colors g-50 these Hats with ible to ; else in New York: The nearest hats that cost $: orn attractive .